11 marzo 2010

Appunti per un articolo serio sul futuro dei libri di carta

I only read on paper. I don’t have an e-reader or an iPhone. I have the best time reading newspapers. I don’t believe books are dead. I’ve seen the figures. Sales of adult fiction are up in the worst economy since the Depression.

— Dave Eggers, intervista al Guardian

P Is for Publishing. And publishing, as you’ve heard, is dying. … But “the printed word will be around long after many of our digital creations are gone,” Zeldman says, “either because books don’t require monthly hosting and blogs and websites do … or because the languages and platforms for which a particular digital creation was published will become obsolete.”

— Jeffrey Zeldman, intervista all’Austin Chronicle

When people lament the loss of the printed book, this — comfort — is usually what they’re talking about. My eyes tire more easily, they say. The batteries run out, the screen is tough to read in sunlight. It doesn’t like bath tubs.
Important to note is that these aren’t complaints about the text losing meaning. Books don’t become harder to understand, or confusing just because they’re digital. It’s mainly issues concerning quality. One inevitable property of the quality argument is that technology is closing the gap (through advancements in screens and batteries) and because of additional features (note taking, bookmarking, searching), will inevitably surpass the comfort level of reading on paper.

— Craig Mod, Books in the Age of the iPad

…with the Kindle you don’t know what the person next to you is reading, or how far along in it they are, or whether their copy of the book is dog-eared or brand new (because it’s neither). One of the most prominent losses in this regard stands to be the loss of bookshelves. A chief virtue of digital books is said to be their economical size—they take up no space at all!—but even a megabyte seems bulky compared to what can be conveyed in the few cubic feet of a bookshelf.

— Kevin Hartnett, In Our Parents’ Bookshelves, The Millions

So, let me make this clear: I’m not announcing the purity of print books over their digital brethren. I don’t want to wax poetic (not too much, anyway) about the sensual pleasures of print books, how they feel and smell, the weight of them – although that must account for something, because what fun will it be to receive an ebook for your birthday? Will anyone even bother? The emergence of a new technology implies the death of another, and the rise of the ebook could mean that no one will ever again give you a novel for hosting a dinner party. I think I’m in mourning.

— Edan Lepuck, Ether Between the Covers: Gifting Books in a Digital Age, The Millions

Scrivi un commento

I commenti per questo articolo sono stati chiusi.

Copyright © 2008-2010 Meia (Licenza) | Powered by Textpattern | Email: alexmeia (chiocciola) gmail.com | Feed: RSS / Atom

meiaweb.com non è da considerarsi in alcun modo una testata giornalistica in quanto non prevede periodicità nell'aggiornamento. Il titolare non si assume alcuna responsabilità per quanto pubblicato all'interno dei commenti, allo stesso tempo si rende disponibile all'autorità competente nel fornire ogni dato in suo possesso in caso di contenzioso. I marchi citati sono da ritenersi proprietà dei legittimi proprietari. Per chi scrive un commento o invia una mail attraverso questo sito, si garantisce la tutela della privacy ai sensi e per gli effetti del D.Lgs 196 30/06/03.

torna in cima